This study reexamined PowerPoint’s potential to enhance traditional pedagogical practices in higher education. The study addressed (1) the conditions under which PowerPoint meets students’ needs in typical lecture-based classrooms, (2) whether professors consider PowerPoint-based lectures more effective than lectures supported by material on chalkboards, and (3) whether PowerPoint is the best tool for what professors want to accomplish in the classroom. The study’s participants were seven faculty members at a four-year US Land Grant institution in the western Pacific serving both undergraduate and graduate students. The participants represented a variety of teaching disciplines from Psychology to English and from Art to Political Science. In the study, data were obtained through non-participant observations and follow-up questions. The findings of this study suggest the ways of using PowerPoint to meet students’ needs, as well as the professor’s needs, by shifting from a passive, teachercentered (thus lecture-style) classroom to an interactive, student-centered classroom.
CITATION STYLE
Inoue-Smith, Y. (2016). College-based case studies in using PowerPoint effectively. Cogent Education, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2015.1127745
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